Posted by
On the Right on Monday, July 21, 2008 12:35:48 PM
Obama, Democrats, and the Surge
This is the week that the Democratic party ran up the white flag
when it comes to the surge in Iraq. Leading the surrender was none
other than Barack Obama, the Democratic party's presumptive nominee for
president and among the most vocal critics of the counterinsurgency
plan that has transformed the Iraq war from a potentially catastrophic
loss to what may turn out to be a historically significant victory.
On Monday, Obama wrote a New York Times op-ed in which he
acknowledged the success of the surge. "In the 18 months since
President Bush announced the surge," Obama wrote, "our troops have
performed heroically in bringing down the level of violence. New
tactics have protected the Iraqi population, and the Sunni tribes have
rejected Al Qaeda--greatly weakening its effectiveness." A day later,
Obama gave a speech in which he declared for the first time that "true
success" and "victory in Iraq" were possible. In addition, the Obama
campaign scrubbed its presidential website to remove criticism of the
surge.
Obama, in typical fashion, is trying to use the success of the surge he
opposed to justify his long-held commitment to withdraw all combat
troops from Iraq as quickly as possible. But turning Iraq into a
winning political issue won't be nearly as easy as Obama once thought.
He has stepped into a trap of his own making.
The trap was set when Obama repeatedly insisted that his superior
"judgment" on Iraq is more important than experience in national
security affairs. Judgment, according to Obama, is what qualifies him
to be commander in chief. So what can we discern about Obama's judgment
on the surge, easily the most important national security decision
since the Iraq war began in March 2003?
To answer that question, we need to revisit what Obama said about
the surge around the time it was announced. In October 2006--three
months before the president's new strategy was unveiled--Obama said,
"It is clear at this point that we cannot, through putting in more
troops or maintaining the presence that we have, expect that somehow
the situation is going to improve, and we have to do something
significant to break the pattern that we've been in right now."
. . . Democrats, rather than welcoming the progress, grew agitated. They
embraced with religious zeal the belief that the Iraq war was lost;
they therefore viewed the success of the surge as a terribly
inconvenient development, one they sought to deny to the point that
they looked silly and out of touch. Worse, Democrats acted as if they
had a vested interest in an American defeat.
Rarely has a political party been so uniformly wrong, in such an
obvious way, on such an important matter. And when Americans cast their
vote on November 4, they should carefully consider how Barack Obama and
the entire Democratic party fought ferociously and relentlessly to
undermine a policy that has worked extraordinarily well and may yet
prove to be among the most successful military plans in modern times.